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Tax Reform January 2013 Administration & Finance

Tax Reform January 2013 Administration & Finance. Our Goals. In order to invest in education, innovation, and infrastructure, the Patrick-Murray Administration proposes to generate new revenue in accordance with these principles:

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Tax Reform January 2013 Administration & Finance

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  1. Tax ReformJanuary 2013Administration & Finance

  2. Our Goals In order to invest in education, innovation, and infrastructure, the Patrick-Murray Administration proposes to generate new revenue in accordance with these principles: • Any proposal to generate new revenue must be comprehensive, allowing us to pay our bills, maintain what we have, and invest in new development to foster economic growth • Any proposal to generate new revenue for transportation must be dedicated for that purpose • Any proposal to generate new revenue must be competitive and fair, both allowing Massachusetts to compete with our neighbors and protecting the most economically vulnerable among us

  3. Tax Revenue Proposal *Personal exemption for Single/Head of Household/Joint filers.

  4. Impact to People

  5. Allocation of New Tax Revenue: FY14-FY18 and FY23

  6. Transportation Need for New Tax Revenue FY14-FY23 Transportation Financing Gap from “The Way Forward” Report Periodic, consistent fare/fee/toll increases (maintain real impact) and Western AET savings MassPort / Gaming / Convention Center contributions Indexing gas tax to inflation (maintain real impact) *FY14 allocation reflects items that can be implemented immediately and the launch of the capital program.

  7. Transportation Need: Solutions from Current Tools(Not Including Gas Tax)

  8. Transportation Need: Solutions from Indexing Gas Tax • Indexing the gas tax to inflation, beginning in FY14, would generate $118M in additional revenue by FY21. Note: Analysis assumes 2% annual inflation.

  9. Gas Tax • Fully funding the transportation investment would require increasing the gas tax to 60 cents per gallon (47 cents after solutions from current tools). Data source: Federation of Tax Administrators.

  10. Public Infrastructure Fund • All sales tax will go to a new Commonwealth Public Infrastructure Fund • Including amounts already pledged to the School Building Authority, the MBTA, and MassDOT • Amounts pledged to the School Building Authority, the MBTA, and MassDOTpass-through the fund without harm to funds or bonds supported by those funds • Amount pledged to MassDOT will be increased to cover transportation gap • The fund may be used for direct expenditure by the Commonwealth, grants, or debt service related to any public infrastructure • The fund is not intended for governmental infrastructure such as state offices or information technology, soft assets such as master plans, or administrative costs such as payroll

  11. Sales Tax Dedicated Entirely to Transportation and Infrastructure Transportation ranges from 1.02 to 1.32 cents for FY15-FY23 (2.14 to 2.44 cents including the MBTA).

  12. Economic Competitiveness: Comparison to Other States Highlighted comparison states include neighbors (CT, ME, NH, RI, VT), industry competitors (CA, NJ, NY, OH, PA), and those ranked best for business (CO, GA, NC, VA, TX).

  13. Economic Competitiveness: Comparison to Other States Highlighted comparison states include neighbors (CT, ME, NH, RI, VT), industry competitors (CA, NJ, NY, OH, PA), and those ranked best for business (CO, GA, NC, VA, TX).

  14. Personal Tax Expenditures • Proposal eliminates 45 personal tax expenditures • This simplifies the tax code • If the goal is also a fairer tax code, reducing the sales tax and doubling the personal exemption is a more efficient way to achieve that result than retaining these personal tax expenditures • Impacts on individuals must be considered in light of all tax changes in the proposal, including reducing sales tax and doubling personal exemptions

  15. Personal Income Tax Expenditures: Proposed for Elimination

  16. Personal Income Tax Expenditures: Retained

  17. Corporate Tax Breaks • Within the category of computer systems design and related services, 29 other states tax modifications to canned programs, and 14 other states tax custom programs • With the migration of software first to the ‘web’ and now to the ‘cloud,’ the line between software (currently taxable) and computer services (not taxable) is becoming untenable, and making these distinctions is difficult both for DOR and taxpayers

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